“Congress is Supreme in Matters of Policy”: D.C. Circuit Rules Against Obama Administration In Halbig

US-CourtOfAppeals-DCCircuit-SealPresident_Barack_ObamaAs I have written about in columns and testimony, the most significant challenge to Obamacare was never Hobby Lobby but Halbig vs. Burwell that has been pending in the D.C. Circuit. I described Halbig in my testimony as a live torpedo in the water for Obamacare. Well, that torpedo just hit. The D.C. Circuit has found that the Obama Administration effectively rewrote the law on a critical provision dealing with tax credits and state exchanges. It is another major blow against the Administration and more importantly another judicial finding that President Obama exceeded his authority in his effort to “go it alone” in ordering such changes to federal laws.

As I suggested in the last blog, the decision was 2-1 with Judge Harry T. Edwards (a Carter appointee) in the dissent and Judges Thomas B. Griffith (a George W. Bush appointee) and A. Raymond Randolph (a George H.W. Bush appointee) in the majority. Randolph wrote a concurring opinion. I obviously agree with the result. I have testified that I believe that the text is clear in the Act and that the Obama Administration effectively altered the language when 34 states decided to defy the government and refuse to create state exchanges. The implications for the viability of the ACA, at least as originally designed, are huge.

When the Administration’s witnesses raised the lower court win in Halbig during the last hearing, I cautioned the Committee to wait to see what was coming because I doubted that the D.C. Circuit would agree with the trial court on its statutory interpretation. As discussed earlier, Halbig challenges the massive federal subsidies in the form of tax credits made available to people with financial need who enroll in the program. In crafting the act, Congress created incentives for states to set up health insurance exchanges and disincentives for them to opt out. The law, for example, made the subsidies available only to those enrolled in insurance plans through exchanges “established by the state.”

But despite that carrot — and to the great surprise of the administration — some 34 states opted not to establish their own exchanges, leaving it to the federal government to do so. This left the White House with a dilemma: If only those enrollees in states that created exchanges were eligible for subsidies, a huge pool of people would be unable to afford coverage, and the entire program would be in danger of collapse.

Indeed, the Halbig plaintiffs — individuals and small businesses in six states that didn’t establish state exchanges — objected that, without the tax credits, they could have claimed exemption from the individual mandate penalty because they would be deemed unable to pay for the coverage. If the courts agree with them, the costs would go up in all 34 states that didn’t establish state exchanges, and the resulting exemptions could lead to a mass exodus from Obamacare.

The administration attempted to solve the problem by simply declaring that even residents of states without their own exchanges were eligible for subsidies, even though the law seemed to specifically say they were not. The administration argues that although the statute’s language does limit subsidies to residents of places with exchanges “established by the state,” that wording actually referred to any exchange, including those established by the federal government. In January, a district court judge upheld that interpretation, allowing the subsidies to continue.

The D.C. Circuit rejected the statutory interpretation of the Administration as well as its argument that the actual language of the law would lead to absurd results:

The fact is that the legislative record provides little indication one way or the other of congressional intent, but the statutory text does. Section 36B plainly makes subsidies available only on Exchanges established by states. And in the absence of any contrary indications, that text is conclusive evidence of Congress’s intent. Cf. Ethyl Corp. v. EPA, 51 F.3d 1053, 1063 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (“At best, the legislative history is cryptic, and this surely is not enough to overcome the plain meaning of the statute.”). To hold otherwise would be to say that enacted legislation, on its own, does not command our respect—an utterly untenable proposition.

The court acknowledges that this decision will rock the ACA at its foundations but says that it must protect congressional authority against executive over-reach:

We reach this conclusion, frankly, with reluctance. At least until states that wish to can set up Exchanges, our ruling will likely have significant consequences both for the millions of individuals receiving tax credits through federal Exchanges and for health insurance markets more broadly. But, high as those stakes are, the principle of legislative supremacy that guides us is higher still. Within constitutional limits, Congress is supreme in matters of policy, and the consequence of that supremacy is that our duty when interpreting a statute is to ascertain the meaning of the words of the statute duly enacted through the formal legislative process. This limited role serves democratic interests by ensuring that policy is made by elected, politically accountable representatives, not by appointed, life-tenured judges.

The dissent by Randolph is quite short and is intended to amplify his view that a “Supreme
Court tax decision, and a tax decision of this court, flatly reject the position the government takes in this case. . . Justice Brandeis’ opinion for the Supreme Court in Iselin v. United States is controlling: ‘What the government asks is not a construction of a statute, but, in effect, an enlargement of it by the court, so that what was omitted, presumably by inadvertence, may be included within its scope. To supply omissions transcends the judicial function.'”

In his dissent, Judge Edwards relies on Chevron to simply give deference to the agency in the interpretation of the law:

Because IRS and HHS have been delegated authority to jointly administer the ACA, this case is governed by the familiar framework of Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984). Under Chevron, if “the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue,” we defer to the agency’s construction of the statute, so long as it is “permissible.” Id. at 843. The Government’s permissible interpretation of the statute easily survives review under Chevron. The Act contemplates that an Exchange created by the federal government on a State’s behalf will have equivalent legal standing with State-created Exchanges. 42 U.S.C. § 18041. And the ACA would be self-defeating if taxpayers who purchase insurance from an HHS created Exchange are deemed ineligible to receive subsidies.

Appellants’ argument cannot be squared with the clear legislative scheme established by the statute as a whole.

The Administration would be moronic not to opt for an appeal en banc to the full D.C. Circuit given its make up. However, as I discussed earlier, even those more liberal judges will have to deal with two recent decisions that seem to reject the holistic interpretive approach of the Administration. See the testimony linked here. The political fallout will also be interesting. Some states might consider creating state exchanges to guarantee tax credits for their citizens. However, citizens in the other states may want the effective option to exempt themselves from the individual mandate that constructively exists in the 24 states. In any case, there is not expected to be any significant changes pending appeal. However, if it stands, it could allow for an exodus from the Act.

While many will simply dismiss this as a predictable move by Republican appointees, I believe that that claim unfair to these judges, unsupported by the decision, and a continuation of our rather poisonous political debate where every opposing voice is denounced as without honor or good faith. The same objection could be made to the Democratically appointed judge in dissent. In reality, all three remained faithful to their views of statutory interpretation, or legisprudence. It is true that the D.C. Circuit has a better array of judges for the Administration but not because of who appointed them. The judges include a number who agree with the broad deference given to agencies, as does Edwards. However, even those judges will have to reconcile recent decisions by the Supreme Court that rejected the same type of “holistic” interpretations. On Michigan v. Bay Mills Indian Community, for example, Justice Elena Kagan held:

But this Court does not revise legislation, as Michigan proposes, just because the text as written creates an ap¬parent anomaly as to some subject it does not address. Truth be told, such anomalies often arise from statutes, if for no other reason than that Congress typically legislates by parts — addressing one thing without examining all others that might merit comparable treatment . . . This Court has no roving license, in even ordinary cases of statutory interpretation, to disregard clear language simply on the view that (in Michigan’s words) Congress ‘must have intended’ something broader.”

Justice Kagan concluded by declaring that “We will not rewrite Congress’s handiwork.” Likewise, the Court rejected an agency interpretation in Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA where the federal agency called for the same deference on an interpretation of the Clean Air Act. However, Justice Scalia wrote for the Court that such interpretations constitute the unconstitutional rewriting of federal law:

We conclude that EPA’s rewriting of the statutory thresholds was impermissible and therefore could not validate the Agency’s interpretation of the triggering provisions. An agency has no power to “tailor” legislation to bureaucratic policy goals by rewriting unambiguous statutory terms. Agencies exercise discretion only in the interstices created by statutory silence or ambiguity; they must always “‘give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.’” National Assn. of Home Builders v. Defenders of Wildlife, 551 U.S. 644, 665, 127 S. Ct. 2518, 168 L. Ed. 2d 467 (2007) (quoting Chevron, 467 U.S., at 843, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 81 L. Ed. 2d 694). It is hard to imagine a statutory term less ambiguous than the precise numerical thresholds at which the Act requires PSD and Title V permitting. When EPA replaced those numbers with others of its own choosing, it went well beyond the “bounds of its statutory authority.” Arlington, 569 U.S., at ___, 133 S. Ct. 1863, 185 L. Ed. 2d 941, 951 (emphasis deleted).
The Solicitor General does not, and cannot, defend the Tailoring Rule as an exercise of EPA’s enforcement discretion.

These two successive losses for the Administration were, of course, followed by the major loss in Hobby Lobby, where the Court rejected the exemption system devised by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) for corporations with religious objections to the contraception provisions of the ACA.

These decisions present additional support for the challengers on how courts are to approach statutory text. While critics insist that the language in the law is a “typo,” that is the type of spin that courts are not supposed to engage in. Any language could be dismissed as mistaken or irrelevant under such approaches. Moreover, the level of deference given to agency by Edwards is disturbing to us who are concerned with the rise of the “Fourth Branch” represented by federal agencies.

In any case, this will be fascinating to watch both legal and politically as the impact of this ruling takes hold.

Here is the decision: Halbig opinion

162 thoughts on ““Congress is Supreme in Matters of Policy”: D.C. Circuit Rules Against Obama Administration In Halbig”

  1. “… where every opposing voice is denounced as without honor or good faith.” Looks like Mr Turley reads his own blog.

  2. To all the lefties who are upset, I point out that Mr Turley anticipated your whining when he wrote, above, roughly para 11: “While many will simply dismiss this as a predictable move by Republican appointees, I believe that that claim unfair to these judges, unsupported by the decision, and a continuation of our rather poisonous political debate where every opposing voice is denounced as without honor or good faith.”

  3. John wrote “Will the judicial branch execute a coup d’état in America?”

    We hear this nonsense all the time. Righties, especially gun bunnies, seriously worried that Clinton would trash the Constitution and stay in office forever. Lefties seriously worried that Bush II would do the same. The judicial angle is fresh, but hardly surprising. I am old enough to know that whenever the economy suffers, conspiracy theories abound. The early 1980s, the first time gold prices went through the roof, was a really good time for paranoia.

    By the way, you recently asked me what I was doing here. Since you did, I published two blog articles (saucymugwump.blogspot.com):
    – Mormon misinformation, libertarian lunacy, and polygamist Pollyannas
    – FICTION: The demise and resurrection of North Korea

    The second, the most recent one, is rather long, almost a short book. Some of us are talented enough to multi-task.

    P.S. To paraphrase Stalin, how many divisions does the judicial branch have?

    1. saucy – I think you may be paraphrasing Pres. Andrew Jackson.

  4. lmao keep on thinking the people will run anything ever again in corporation i love how some people are still being fooled by the corporation. the elites own both sides of the corporation from top to bottom..

    but hey allow the distractions to keep on. when the truth hits it will not be so funny or good

  5. John, honestly, what makes you think the military will side with insurrectionists?

  6. The only questions that remains is:

    Will the judicial branch execute a coup d’état in America?

    Forget the Fourth branch of government,

    It will then be time for the military to intervene.

    America is beyond the pale.

  7. Great insights on a skim of the article, but what a pile of issues. Comments are enlightening. It just proves to me that so much needs to be fixed. ACA or no ACA, where does it lead? I don’t see a positive outcome for the consumer here with any model. May help in the interim. And I am one of lucky ones with good insurance through my wife’s employer. The math on the rising costs of all of this is alarming. This still needs to be contained or the budget of the country will be healthcare and military spending.

  8. Dredd,
    How unimpressive and predictable. You need some new material.

  9. John wrote “My father-in-law lived through the Depression and said, ‘You could always get a job. You might not like the job, but you could always get one’.”

    That explains a lot. What he said was total horse patties, as the unemployment rate was 25%. There are plenty of photos showing men riding the rails to find work, signs along the lines of “Unemployed men, just keep on going, because we cannot take care of our own,” men selling apples on a street corner, and families living in shanty-towns, a/k/a Hoovervilles.

    You and your father-in-law experienced good fortune and you assume, wrongly, that people complaining of unemployment are just losers. Today, if one has a job, life is relatively good. One can transfer to another job. But if one is laid-off for any reason, that person has a high likelihood of staying unemployed because of intolerant people like you assuming there is something wrong with that person.

    1. “That explains a lot. What he said was total horse patties, as the unemployment rate was 25%.”

      Thanks for pointing out the BS. Even today at much lower UI rate there are 3 candidates for every job opening.

      Most of those had good jobs and careers before unemployment. Some do catch another job within 6 months. But 6 months is a dividing line. For those the who remain unemployed after 6 months the prospects are bleak and become worse with every passing month.

      Firms are reluctant to take a chance on someone who has been unemployed so long.

      And the problem is compounded by arrogant, ignorant people who assume that those unemployed for long periods have problems.

      Their problem is that they do not have a job. And that fact is due largely to choices that we make as a society such as the trade balance we set through international agreements and monetary policy.

      What is amazing is that the unemployed and the underemployed are so complacent and accepting of their government manufactured misery.

      This country could put people back to work starting tomorrow if our elected representatives wanted to do that.

  10. This post is a day and a dollar short, but here goes. Seems to me that the healthcare service is out of line with the rest of the economy. Doctors get rich. My community is full of foreign doctors getting in the US for the big bucks. Pharmaceutical companies make pretty good coin. Just about anything else attached to healthcare seems pretty much like a gold mine at this point. Watched a PBS program on healthcare a few years ago, and the prices charged here for services compared to Germany and Japan are staggering. At that time (08-09…???) an MRI in Japan was $10. I know that is a little low, but that is what they were forced to charge. The Japanese felt this diagnostic tool saved a lot of money in the long term. I think something is wrong with US healthcare as a protected industry of government and AMA–not being subject to market forces at all, and maybe everyone should start there. The way costs keep rising, there isn’t enough gold on the planet to pay for where they are going. I don’t think this whole argument is warranted when there is a larger problem that needs addressed elsewhere.

  11. This decision is not a surprise. In fact the administration seemed to give itself another self inflicted gunshot wound last week by finding an exemption for the US territories. And the reasoning appears to be a direct contradiction to the argument made for calling the Federal government the “state”.

    When our controlling legal document talks about the many states, it’s pretty clear to me a national government is not part of that. Trying to change the definition of state now never was going to work. It may have been inadvertent, but the law is not, as Prof. Turley stated, ambiguous.

  12. Mike Appleton

    It may well be that Congress did not “intend” to permit the states to destroy the law by refusing to create exchanges. The problem is that, in the absence of ambiguity, we determine what Congress intended by reference to what Congress said. If the language chosen by Congress does not reflect what was really intended, the solution is for Congress to adopt an amendment containing language which correctly reflects its intent. That is neither the function nor prerogative of the courts, at least if the notion of separation of powers is to mean anything.
    =============================
    Very true Mike.

    In this case, however, we see that “ambiguity” has a narrow and a broad meaning, depending on the statutory character.

    This statute has revolutionary character in the sense that it catches us up to a world that left us 100 years ago in terms of “the common good.”

    A one-line statute has one degree of potential ambiguity, while a 10,000 line statute has another degree of ambiguity.

    The flat-earth and the global-earth cannot be construed by the same factual dynamics, even though analytical abstractions can be applied to both statutes.

    What congress expected to happen, then grow, the become embedded into the national fabric must be considered when construing where they were envisioned going, and where they began.

    That is what I meant when I said up-thread that the majority opinion was well done but too anal.

    They applied the legal hermeneutics used to analyze a sentence to a book.

  13. rafflaw

    Dredd,
    I released your comment from the spam filter.
    ============================
    You sir are a gentleman and a scholar, but I will not tell anyone.

  14. Annie

    “Saucy and Raff, I think John channels the Founders daily, or so he would have us think.”

    You’re absolutely correct. I don’t understand it myself. I think I assimilated from my Grandfather that people worked and took care of themselves.

    There was no welfare state. People were free and they lived their lives. My father-in-law lived through the Depression and said, “You could always get a job. You might not like the job, but you could always get one.” Early on, he swept up a bakery. He took care of himself and his family.

    Freedom and self-reliance seems like what the Founders said.

    What would this thread; what would America be like if people just took care of themselves – obtianed their own healthcare or any other insurance, food, clothes, housing, cars, whatever?

    What would America be like if government were limited to security and infrastructure and life and industry were up to the free individual? Ever really read the Preamble?

    Yeah. I’m channeling that.

    I’m compelled. I’m passionate.

    I’m sorry.

    I apologize.

    I hope that’s polite.

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